Archive for » January, 2012 «

Kenya doctor fights mental health stigma in ‘traumatized continent’


Click to play

Editor’s note: Every week CNN International’s African Voices highlights Africa’s most engaging personalities, exploring the lives and passions of people who rarely open themselves up to the camera.

(CNN) — As Kenya’s leading psychiatrist, Frank Njenga has been championing the cause of better mental health care on the east African country and the continent for more than three decades.

He’s been working tirelessly to bring quality mental health care in a country where mentally disabled people receive little help from the state and face massive stigma from society.

“It’s a horrible indictment on what we’ve done but the truth and reality is that very little has been done systematically and deliberately by government or by ourselves to bring up the level of mental health in this part of the world,” says Njenga.

In Kenya, an estimated three million, mostly poor, people live with intellectual and mental disabilities, according to NGO and United Nations figures. At the same time, the ratio of psychiatrists to the population is dismal — just one psychiatrist to half a million people.

See also: Kenya’s mentally ill locked up and forgotten

But Njenga, who is president of the African Association of Psychiatrists, says the problem is even worse in other countries on the continent.


A psychiatrist in Kenya


Lessons of mental healthcare

“It is a major challenge but it is a challenge that is very sadly is spread across the whole of the Africa continent,” he says Njenga.

“In fact, Kenya is ironically behind South Africa and perhaps Egypt in the ratios of psychiatrists that are available per population. There are countries in Africa where there is no single psychiatrist to five-six million people.”

This has motivated Njenga to dedicate his life helping mental health patients and raising awareness in a continent where mental disorders are often neglected and described as “un-African” and belonging to “people in the West.”

Njenga, however, discards such claims as “clear nonsense.”

“For as long as you are a self-confessed human being you will continue to suffer human conditions of which mental disorders are an integral part,” he says.

Read also: Namibia’s ‘miracle doctor’ brings gift of sight

Njenga describes Africa as “truly the traumatized continent” that’s been plagued by wars, human suffering and lethal dictatorships.

“Whether you are looking at Rwanda or southern Sudan or Sierra Leone or DRC, the number of women and children and adults who have suffered severe trauma is greater than any other continent that I can think of.”

He underlines the link between good mental health and productivity and calls policy makers to make mental health services a priority in order to help their countries escape poverty.

“There is no health without mental health and there is no economy,” says Njenga. “We are losing far too many men and women to mental illness and therefore to un-productivity by not treating them for mental illness.”

Born in Kenya, Njenga was inspired as a teenager by the work of psychiatrist Frantz Fanon, writer of “Wretched of the Earth,” a seminal book that explores identity and the post-colonial experience.

From then on, Njenga was convinced he wanted to be a psychiatrist. He went on to study psychology throughout medical school in Kenya before moving to the UK for his post-graduate studies at the Maudsley Hospital — the world’s oldest psychiatric hospital.

At the end of this studies, however, Njenga chose not to pursue a career in the UK but to return to his home country, committed to promoting the cause of better mental health in the continent.

“I went to the UK to come back and to come back as a psychiatrist and to make a difference in my homeland and in my continent. That is the reason I left Kenya and that is the reason I came back,” he says.

Read also:The Africans giving aid to the world

On his return to Kenya, Njenga embarked on a mission to reduce the social stigma that is attached to going to a psychiatrist or seeing a mental health professional.

In a ground-breaking weekly show called “Frankly Speaking,” Njenga spoke with his patients on television, putting the spotlight on tough issues such as schizophrenia and substance abuse — taboo topics that were usually kept out of public sight.

“I felt powerful and relaxed I felt at last here I was able to tell it exactly as it was,” he says. “Of all the things I have done in this society and community it is the program on television — Frankly Speaking — because I spoke frankly as my name is and my patients spoke very frankly indeed.”

In his commitment to providing top-notch mental health care, Njenga also helped build a private in-patient psychiatric hospital, the first of its kind in Kenya.

He’s also authored several children’s books in a bid to build better understanding of mental illness and advocated for an insurance cover for mental health patients as chairman of the largest insurance company in Kenya.

Through awareness and affordable treatment, Njenga has changed how many people in Kenya think about mental health.

“Today the discussion of mental health issues on this continent is focused and is positive — about that I feel proud and privileged,” he says.

CNN’s Leposo Lillian, David McKenzie and Jessica Ellis contributed to this report.






Share this on:

Similar news:
Category: Mental Health  Tags: ,  Comments off

Colbert super PAC reports $1 million in donations


Stephen Colbert

Comedian Stephen Colbert collects cash donations on the sidewalk in front of the Federal Election Commission in Washington June 30, 2011.

(Credit:
AP Photo)

The super PAC run by comedian Stephen Colbert — Americans for a Better Tomorrow, Tomorrow — reported to the Federal Election Commission (FEC) early Tuesday morning that as of Monday, it had collected $1,023,121.24 in donations.

Colbert’s super PAC, often discussed on his Comedy Central satirical show “The Colbert Report,” has helped shed light on the significant role super PACs have played in this election cycle, spending millions of dollars to back political candidates. All campaigns and super PACs have until the end of Tuesday to report their finances to the FEC.

Along with its financial disclosure report, Colbert’s group filed a memo with a statement from Colbert, which said, “Yeah! How you like me now, F.E.C? I’m rolling seven digits deep! I got 99 problems but a non-connected independent-expenditure only committee ain’t one!”

Super PACs allow donors to pour unlimited money into a campaign to support or attack a political candidate. The super PACs must remain technically unaffiliated with the candidates, but they are often run by a candidate’s former staffers or close colleagues.

For instance, Newt Gingrich’s former presidential campaign spokesman Rick Tyler is now a senior adviser for the pro-Gingrich super PAC Winning Our Future. That super PAC has been able to give a much-needed boost to Gingrich’s White House bid, thanks to $10 million in donations from Las Vegas billionaire casino owner Sheldon Adelson.

For a short period of time, Americans for a Better Tomorrow, Tomorrow was run by Colbert’s Comedy Central colleague Jon Stewart. With the super PAC out of Colbert’s control, the group ran a series of television ads to back Colbert’s short-lived run for “president of the United States of South Carolina.” Since Colbert couldn’t get on the Republican primary ballot in South Carolina, the super PAC urged voters in the state to vote for Herman Cain.


Similar news:
Category: Donations  Tags: ,  Comments off

TravelShark™ Launches People-Powered Hunt to Find Charity Partners for New …


SINGAPORE, Jan. 31, 2012 /PRNewswire/ –TravelShark announced today the launch of a worldwide search to identify three charities to receive donations from the company’s new socially enabled photo-sharing application, TravelSharkPix. The three-week “TravelSharkPix Charity Hunt” allows users to suggest their favorite charity for consideration and rally popular support during an online vote to choose the winning organizations.

To view the multimedia assets associated with this release, please click http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/travelshark-launches-people-powered-hunt-to-find-charity-partners-for-new-photo-sharing-app-travelsharkpix-138367499.html

From now through February 10th, users can visit TravelSharkPix and suggest a charity. Starting on February 13th, global visitors will be able to vote for their favorite charities. The three selected charities will receive donations every time a user’s photo is accepted on TravelSharkPix.

TravelSharkPix allows travelers to share their favorite trip photos with other users of the app. In addition, TravelShark will display the best SharkPix pictures across its global network of travel sites - including LasVegasHotels.com, SingaporeHotels.com, HotelLondon.com, VancouverHotels.com, and more – with attribution to the photographers. For every photo accepted by TravelSharkPix, the company will donate between $0.10 and $0.25 to the three charities selected in the hunt.

To share this unique opportunity with charities and their supporters around the world, TravelShark deployed its most recognizable representative - award-winning company mascot Mako Mark - to star in a widely distributed video campaign. In the video, the optimistic Mako Mark is foiled in his attempts to connect with the right charity for TravelSharkPix. Undaunted, he perseveres and devises a crowd-sourced plan asking users for suggestions of popular charities.

“We are excited to tap the wisdom of our global community of users to pick our new charity partners for SharkPix,” said CEO Sue Heilbronner. “We love to see people sharing their travel photos and stories. TravelSharkPix gives them a perfect platform, and it’s all for a good cause, or three.”

About TravelShark | TravelShark is the world’s largest online travel network, with thousands of location-based travel websites for destinations around the globe. TravelShark connects global travelers with hyper-local travel solutions and memorable trips. TravelShark recently launched the Sharky Awards, recognizing unique and unexpected “finds” in travel, and TravelSharkPix, which allows people to share their favorite trip photos with fellow travelers looking for inspiration for their next trip. The company’s content-rich websites – including BostonHotels.com, SingaporeHotels.com, BeijingHotels.com and SeattleHotels.com – help hotels and resorts generate profitable revenue for travel companies by driving direct bookings through TravelShark’s Featured Hotel Program. TravelShark is headquartered in Singapore, with a U.S. office in Boulder, Colorado. To learn more, visit www.travelshark.com, or call +1-720-239-1280 or +65 6734 8515.

Related Links:TravelShark WebsiteTravelSharkPix WebsiteNominate a charity for the Charity Hunt

SOURCE TravelShark


Similar news:
Category: Charities  Tags: ,  Comments off

International Mental Health Research Organization Announces 2012 IMHRO Rising Star Awards for Mental Health Research

RUTHERFORD, Calif.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–

The International Mental Health Research Organization (IMHRO) has
announced its 2012 IMHRO Rising Star Translational Research Awards,
which are sponsored by IMHRO and Johnson Johnson Services, Inc. IMHRO
and the Corporate Office of Science and Technology of Johnson Johnson
Services, Inc. identify and fund critical and cutting edge research on
the causes of and cures for brain disorders. IMHRO serves as an umbrella
organization to provide support for mental health research.

The 2012 IMHRO Rising Star Translational Research Award winners are
Colleen McClung, Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
Department of Psychiatry, who is being recognized for her study
“Specific HDAC inhibition as a novel treatment for bipolar disorder,”
and Scott Russo, Ph.D., Mount Sinai School of Medicine Department of
Neuroscience, for his study “Inflammation and Depression: translating
basic discoveries into new therapeutics.”

Given the challenges of finding therapies for nervous system disorders,
this award aims to encourage the community of neuroscience researchers
to direct their efforts toward translational science while supporting
the research of emerging leaders in the field.

The 2012 IMHRO Rising Star Translational Research Award winners were
selected by IMHRO and Johnson Johnson Services, Inc. Corporate Office
of Science and Technology with the assistance and recommendations of the
IMHRO scientific advisory board, which includes nine of the leading
brain scientists in the world, noted for their pioneering research in
their respective fields. Each Rising Star recipient will receive
$250,000 to fund research for their studies.

“The results of this study,” says Dr. McClung, “will identify specific
HDAC proteins to target for the development of novel therapeutics for
the treatment of bipolar disorder. This will be a large step forward for
the health of those who suffer from this devastating disease.”

Dr. Russo adds, “These translational studies will ultimately help us to
determine the antidepressant efficacy of anti-inflammatory medications
that target IL6 and other inflammatory processes.”

The grant recipients will be presented at the Staglin Family Vineyard
Music Festival for Mental Health on September 15, 2012 at the Staglin
Family Vineyard, in Rutherford, CA. Events of the day include a
scientific seminar, followed by an exclusive wine reception featuring
many specialized wineries from Napa, Sonoma and other wine regions of
the world paired with hors d’œuvres prepared by Nancy Oakes of Boulevard
in San Francisco, a concert by a legendary musical act, and a Napa
Valley feast under the stars at the VIP post-concert dinner by Nancy
Silverton of Pizzeria Mozza and Osteria Mozza in Los Angeles. Tickets
for the lecture, exclusive wine reception and concert are $750. Tickets
for the lecture, reception, concert and VIP dinner are $5000 with table
of ten sponsorships beginning at $50,000. All revenues will go to mental
health research projects funded by IMHRO throughout the nation.
Admission to the seminar only is free.

Donations to the Music Festival for Mental Health may be made on-line at www.music-festival.org,
or by sending a check to IMHRO, a 501 (c) (3) non-profit organization
that sponsors the Music Festival. Please mail donations to: P.O. Box
680, Rutherford, Calif., 94573.

For further information, please email cindy@imhro.org
or visit www.imhro.org.

About IMHRO:

International Mental Health Research Organization (IMHRO) is
committed to raising awareness and funding research to find preventions
and cures for schizophrenia, major depression and bipolar disorder
within a generation.

Psychiatric diseases cause much suffering, both for people afflicted and
those who love them. Probably, this includes someone you know: 1 in 5
people lives with a psychiatric disease. It is the number 1 cause of
adult disability in the world.

IMHRO is families and individuals whose lives have been touched by brain
disorders—and who have seen how far mental health research has come in
the last decade. Contributors to IMHRO have raised $135 million for
research, changed thousands of lives, and funded stunning discoveries
for better therapies now and tomorrow.


Similar news:

Local nonprofit mental health agencies merging

Posted: January 31
Updated: Today at 10:04 PM

Local nonprofit mental health agencies merging

WATERVILLE — Two area nonprofit mental health agencies are merging to save money as well as share and expand services.

Waterville-based Kennebec Behavioral Health will buy Youth Family Services Inc. in Skowhegan and Augusta today, according to George Myers, director of communications and community outreach at Kennebec Behavioral Health.

Starting Wednesday, the combined agencies will operate as Kennebec Behavioral Health.

Thomas McAdam, chief executive officer of Kennebec Behavior Health, said patient care will continue uninterrupted and that all 36 Youth Family Services employees have been invited to join the 316 employees of Kennebec Behavioral Health.

McAdam said Kennebec Behavioral Health will buy all the assets of Youth Family Services and be open for business Thursday morning. He declined to specify the amount of the purchase.

Efficiencies, McAdam said, will be gained by eliminating any duplication of services and by combining agency offices in Skowhegan and Augusta.

Kennebec Behavioral Health will move into Youth Family Services headquarters at 5 Commerce Drive from its leased space on High Street.

In Augusta, Kennebec Behavioral Health will move into the Youth Family Services building at 72 Winthrop St. from its Winthrop Street offices.

Kennebec Behavior Health treats adults and families with mental illness, trauma and emotional or behavioral problems.

Last year the agency served 12,253 clients at its two clinics in Waterville, and one each in Skowhegan, Augusta and Winthrop, Myers said. It was founded in 1960.

Youth Family Services specializes in mental health, substance abuse and youth shelter services for central Maine families and others.

Last year Youth Family Services served 1,000 clients, Myers said. It was founded in 1974.

McAdam said that for years employees at the two agencies have collaborated and that since mental health providers have received “budget haircuts the last five years that have made them half-bald,” it made economic sense to join forces.

Lora Wilford-McManus, director of Youth Family Services, said the merger is a natural fit.

The move will “provide quality services to clients and their families and … save taxpayer dollars at the same time,” she said.

Wilford-McManus will become a member of the clinical staff at Kennebec Behavioral Health.

McAdam echoed that the merger would benefit clients and taxpayers.

He said services in Somerset County should be enhanced. “We’ve long recognized the need to provide more services going up the river,” he said.

Kennebec Behavioral Health offers 30 programs, including psychiatric services. There are 16 psychiatrists on staff, four of whom are child psychiatrists.

Youth Family Services has provided nine programs, including two not offered by Kennebec Behavioral Health: community case management for adults with mental retardation and autism as well as the Halcyon House, a shelter for homeless youth 10-17 years old.

McAdam said lawmakers in Augusta routinely ask him how he knows the provided services work.

He said his organization regularly evaluates and adjusts patients’ treatment. “Our goal is to get people back functioning to their maximum capacity,” he said.

Each year, McAdam said, 20 percent of Americans have some sort of mental health problem.

While it can be difficult to quantify what happens when mental health services are gutted, he said, when the unseen support networks erode, homelessness, emergency room visits and crime rates increase.

Myers said the most common request from adults seeking help is for assistance with depression.

Adults, though, are not the only ones in need.

McAdam said there is a waiting list of children to be treated by a staff psychiatrist; 1,400 youths received treatment in 2011, he said.

Beth Staples — 861-9252

bstaples@centralmaine.com

Were you interviewed for this story? If so, please fill out our accuracy form

Send Question/Comment to the Publisher



Similar news:
Category: Mental Health  Tags: ,  Comments off

Lack of donations forces Covina food bank to close doors


It’s the end of an era in Covina: For nearly 80 years, volunteers have brought hope to needy families at the Covina Area Emergency Aid Center. But now those doors are closing. Donations just haven’t been able to keep up with the growing demand

Janice Lussier says she has relied on getting food from the Covina Area Emergency Aid Center for years. She is heartbroken the center is closing its doors.

Volunteers at the center say there has been a dramatic drop in donations over the last few years, forcing the center to shut its doors.

“Back when my daughter was young I came here to get help because I was a single mom and I didn’t have enough money to get food, pay a babysitter and all of that,” said Lussier. “I was here in November because I didn’t have any money to go out and buy Thanksgiving, and they gave me a turkey and they gave me all kinds of food,” said Lussier.

Covina Area Emergency Aid has been around since 1933. Volunteers say over the last several years the need has gotten so much greater than the supply they have no other choice but to close.

It’s alarming. It’s just a sign of the times, I would say. We just can’t keep up with the demand anymore,” said Harry Anderson, a food bank volunteer.

Ernest Rodriguez says he and his wife are both disabled and depend on the food center to help make ends meet.

“This one is shutting down, and one by one they are just like a domino effect,” said Ernest Rodriguez.

“I feel bad because everyone in the area needs the help that are lower income, disabled, homeless and we have quite a few in our area and there is other food banks but they are all having a hard time,” said Sharon Rodriguez.

The Los Angeles Regional Food Bank, the largest food bank in L.A. County, provides food aid to 640 food centers, pantries and other volunteer agencies throughout L.A. County.

Officials with the Regional Food Bank say demand for food aid has increased 80 percent in the last four years while donations have declined.

To find a pantry or other center serviced by the Los Angeles Regional Food Bank, go to the organization’s website, www.lafoodbank.org/pantry-locator.

<!– POLL

ABC7 Poll

–>

Get more Los Angeles News »

charity, los angeles news, leo stallworth

<!–

–>

Recently Published

  • A man suspected of leading police on a dangerous high-speed chase Monday night is in custody. A passenger is on the lam.
  • Driver leads CHP in risky pursuit through LA

  • KABC-TV covers Los Angeles and Southern California.
  • 2 killed, 1 wounded in Wilmington shooting

  • The Metro Orange Line extension from Canoga Park to Chatsworth is being completed under budget.
  • Orange Line extension running under budget


Similar news:
Category: Donations  Tags: ,  Comments off

AT&T Makes Donation to Support Children’s Cancer Charity Camp Quality

SYDNEY, Jan. 31, 2012 /PRNewswire/ — ATT Inc.* continues to support Australian charities and has donated US$29,000 to Camp Quality, a charity that supports children living with cancer and their families in Australia.

In Australia, every day nearly three children are diagnosed with cancer, and every week three children will lose their battle with the disease. There are currently 15,000 children in Australia who are either recently diagnosed, currently in treatment or in remission from cancer. The donation will help Camp Quality in its work to build resilience in the lives of children living with cancer and their families, through a combination of fun therapy, education and medical support.

“We’re thrilled to be able to help such a worthy cause as Camp Quality,” said Fred Girouard, ATT managing director for Australia and New Zealand. “We were introduced to Camp Quality by the Arnott’s Foundation, one of the charity’s leading partner organizations, and it’s a fantastic Australian charity, doing great things for Australian families affected by cancer.”

“In Australia, approximately 900 children are diagnosed with cancer each year. That is why ATT’s support of Camp Quality will have such an impact. Thank you for helping us to bring optimism, happiness and resilience to the lives of children and families living with cancer,” said Bronwyn Neeson, partnerships manager, Camp Quality. “A parent recently said to me that Camp Quality means a lot of things to their family: ‘To me it is where Brendan learnt to smile again and where he played for the first time after many months.’ ATT’s support helps us to continue to have this impact with our children and families during their cancer journey.”

*ATT products and services are provided or offered by subsidiaries and affiliates of ATT Inc. under the ATT brand and not by ATT Inc.

About Camp QualityCamp Quality is the children’s family cancer charity that believes in bringing optimism and happiness to the lives of children and families affected by cancer through fun therapy. We believe laughter is the best medicine.

About Philanthropy at ATTATT Inc. (NYSE: T) is committed to advancing education, strengthening communities and improving lives. Through its philanthropic initiatives, ATT has a long history of supporting projects that create learning opportunities; promote academic and economic achievement; and address community needs. In 2010, more than $148.2 million was contributed through corporate-, employee- and ATT Foundation-giving programs.

About ATTATT Inc. (NYSE: T) is a premier communications holding company and one of the most honored companies in the world. Its subsidiaries and affiliates – ATT operating companies – are the providers of ATT services in the United States and around the world. With a powerful array of network resources that includes the nation’s fastest mobile broadband network, ATT is a leading provider of wireless, Wi-Fi, high speed Internet, voice and cloud-based services. A leader in mobile broadband and emerging 4G capabilities, ATT also offers the best wireless coverage worldwide of any U.S. carrier, offering the most wireless phones that work in the most countries. It also offers advanced TV services under the ATT U-verse® and ATT |DIRECTV brands. The company’s suite of IP-based business communications services is one of the most advanced in the world. In domestic markets, ATT Advertising Solutions and ATT Interactive are known for their leadership in local search and advertising. 

Additional information about ATT Inc. and the products and services provided by ATT subsidiaries and affiliates is available at http://www.att.com.  This ATT news release and other announcements are available at http://www.att.com/newsroom and as part of an RSS feed at www.att.com/rss. Or follow our news on Twitter at @ATT.

© 2012 ATT Intellectual Property. All rights reserved. Mobile broadband not available in all areas. ATT, the ATT logo and all other marks contained herein are trademarks of ATT Intellectual Property and/or ATT affiliated companies.

SOURCE ATT Inc.


Similar news:
Category: Charities  Tags: ,  Comments off

Mental health nurse censured for 'inappropriate' texts

A former mental health nurse who inappropriately called and text-messaged
patients has been found guilty of professional misconduct and suspended from
working for 18 months.

Collin Kora was employed by the Counties Manukau District Health Board’s
(CMDHB) community mental health services between May and September 2010, until
he resigned when disciplinary proceedings were brought against him.

In a judgment released on Tuesday, the Health Practitioners Disciplinary
Tribunal found Mr Kora’s contact with two mental health patients amounted to
misconduct and malpractice.

He began texting a patient, referred to as Ms V, in May 2010 – sending her 27
messages over a four-hour period from his work phone, in which he allegedly said
he was watching pornography.

He continued texting her throughout May and June, before Ms V informed her
key mental health worker about the texts in September.

Mr Kora called another mental health patient, Ms N, in August and asked if he
could come to her home and watch DVDs with her.

When confronted by his employer, Mr Kora denied the allegations, saying the
patients were paranoid schizophrenics and they must have misinterpreted what had
occurred.

Mr Kora said he had only contacted Ms V to ensure she was taking her
medication.

Following an investigation, the Nursing Council’s professional conduct
committee charged Mr Kora with professional misconduct and malpractice.

The HPDT found him guilty of both, and censured Mr Kora for his actions,
saying censure was “a mark of the tribunal’s significant dissatisfaction with
behaviour of this kind and the inappropriateness of such misconduct”.

It disqualified Mr Kora from practising for 18 months, and he would need 18
months supervision if he was employed again.

He was also ordered to undertake a course on ethical behaviour and
boundaries, and to pay costs.

NZN


Similar news:

Charity and Its Types

Charity and Its TypesWhat is charity? This is a human need to help neighbors, a special state of mind or the spiritual and personal growth. Everyone has his own motivation and his own answer to this question. All the “benefactors” in common – not indifferent egoists, they are people capable to act not to be witty, but for universal human need. There are diverse types of charities nowadays, as people are different and different their needs.

Corporate Philanthropy – voluntary activities of a commercial organization to help those in need or to support social projects – their own or other organizations. In this area of ​​investment is not directly related to the core business of the company. Unlike businesses, for whom charity – additional activities not directly related to the existence of the company, for charities is the main activity. We can say that the funds professionally engaged in charity and nothing more. Source for funds in most cases serve private and corporate donations to non-refundable, but sometimes have the funds and their capital. A number of funds exist to interest on capital or securities or community foundation. Some companies for charities create their own funds.

Private charity – the most common type of charitable activity, it is to sacrifice individuals for specific purposes like money and items, medicines, in short, any resource. Funds for charity is a source of significant, if not fixed assets. If corporate philanthropists choose social problems itself by means of their (often this choice is determined by the interests and tastes of the manual), the Foundation responds to the existing society into serious problems and is seeking charity funds to address them.

Another kind of charities is philanthropy – a word of Greek origin meaning “love for people.” In dictionaries that “philanthropy” – the same as that of charity, thus, it is a full synonym. From a functional point of view this is perhaps difficult to argue: the one and the other appear as a voluntary allocation of private resources for the needy. However, one can imagine a situation in which the charity would not be a philanthropy. For example, the provision of grant aid to animals of the National Park cannot be called “love for people,” i.e., philanthropy, but you can call the charity. On the one hand, such a strategic investment aimed at public good in general (to maintain ecological balance), on the other – charity helps not people but animals. If so, then the difference between philanthropy and charity lies not in specific forms of action, and exclusively in the field of motivation. Although by and large, do not help the individuals and their groups, and investing in nature, art, science, sooner or later “reach” to society in the form of environmental improvements, new discoveries, works of art, etc. There are numerous forms of charities, but you are to remember, that all of them only one goal – to help the planet!


Similar news:
Category: What is Charity  Comments off

What is Charity?

What is Charity?The majority of charities possess the same goal: to annihilate the problem they are against and cease to exist. Unfortunately, most charities are unable to attain that goal as either the problems are too large for one charity to annihilate, or not enough people are donating or becoming involved. Charity work is a community effort, not simple a job for a single person or group. By definition the act of charity is generous actions or donations to aid the poor, the ill, or those who are unable to help themselves. However to the recipients, charity is much more than a simple definition or abstract concept in which most people rarely think about.

To the starving, charity is having food. To the naked, charity is being given clothes. To the homeless, a place to sleep, and to the sick, charity is having relief from illness. A person who makes $12,000 per year is among the top 10% most wealthy people in the world, and yet most people in North America are unwilling to open their wallets to help those in need.

Charity is helping those who cannot help themselves, and those who cannot help themselves appreciate every cent that is given to them. Many charities strive to provide relief for those in impoverished countries who are on the brink of death; however these charities often do not make it in time to save lives, as not enough people have contributed to that particular cause. If even 1000 people donated $10, the charity would have $10,000 to provide immediate relief and save more lives. Every dollar counts and every person who participates in donating their time or resources is helping make a difference in the lives of others.

Often people think of giving as simply offering spare change to a church donation box or homeless person, however there are many other ways to donate. For instance, sacrificing money or time so that others can have food or clothes is a common practise. Many charitable people use their holiday time to volunteer with a charity, or sacrifice purchasing an item for themselves to give that money to a charity. People who feel strongly about making difference in their world will actively search for ways to contribute.

Most people are unaware that they can actually earn a separate income while simultaneously donating to charity. Purpose Marketing® is a new concept in which network marketing companies donate a percentage of their profits from each sale to a charity. Average people can sell these products and know that they are helping others without opening their wallet!


Similar news:
Category: What is Charity  Comments off